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Is the Multi 2 Worth it?

#61 User is offline   hotShot 

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Posted 2011-December-09, 07:50

View PostCyberyeti, on 2011-December-09, 07:45, said:

You forgot the "and good defenders". Overbidding a bit is easier to get away with when you're likely to get help from the defence.


You are right of cause.
I thought that card play was defense and declarer play.
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#62 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2011-December-09, 08:53

View PostTrinidad, on 2011-December-09, 03:01, said:

I suppose you don't want me to compare with doubles that show at least (34) in the majors (also popular, and probably better than doubling on any weak NT). After all, those who play that method will also pass with a 2344 or 33(34) weak NT. (But they, and I, know that the bidding isn't over yet.)


What worries me is the increasing popularity of the weak-only Multi, where the bidding may well be over.
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#63 User is offline   Free 

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Posted 2011-December-09, 09:25

View PostTrinidad, on 2011-December-09, 03:18, said:

Maybe it would be possible to organize a "Multi tourney series" on BBO?
Pairs would have to choose between four systems: Something natural (SAYC, 2/1, Acol) with
1) 2 as weak two
2) 2 18-19 NT, 2 as weak two
3) 2 Multi, 2 Acol strong two
4) 2 Multi, 2 Lucas (a) or Muiderberg (b)

I realize that it is very hard to draw any scientific conclusions from the results of these tourneys since there is a correlation between the strength of a pair and the system that they choose (where the system played is not actually the cause of the pair's ability). But it could be fun to have a modern variation of 'Scientists v Naturalists'.

Rik

I'm sure Richard would be willing to participate if you include Frelling two's to that list :)
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#64 User is offline   Free 

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Posted 2011-December-09, 09:36

View Post32519, on 2011-December-09, 05:47, said:

In a survey of the nation’s top bridge players a few years ago, the experts were asked what they consider the most important aspect of bridge play. Just about everyone said they think bidding is approximately 80% of the game. No matter how well you play, your results will be bad if you do not reach reasonable contracts.

This quote is outdated. A few weeks/months ago we had the same survey on the forums. The conclusion was the exact opposite. Main reasons were that many hands just bid themselves, and impossible contract can sometimes be braught home by a skillful declarer. If you bid to a perfect slam on an exotic squeeze, but you can't play your cards, then you'll go down and lose a lot more than if you'd bid to a lower contract and make it.
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#65 User is offline   mwalimu02 

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Posted 2011-December-09, 12:09

View Postgwnn, on 2011-October-23, 05:19, said:

is the
Is the Multi 2 worth it?
worth it?


Yes it is!
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#66 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2011-December-09, 17:28

View PostFree, on 2011-December-09, 09:36, said:

This quote is outdated. A few weeks/months ago we had the same survey on the forums. The conclusion was the exact opposite. Main reasons were that many hands just bid themselves, an impossible contract can sometimes be brought home by a skillful declarer. If you bid to a perfect slam on an exotic squeeze, but you can't play your cards, then you'll go down and lose a lot more than if you'd bid to a lower contract and make it.


The threads you are referring to are:
Bidding is 80% of bridge http://www.bridgebas...is-80-of-bridge
What’s the best way to improve your play? http://www.bridgebas...rove-your-play/
Developing Bidding Judgement http://www.bridgebas...ding-judgement/

I am not arguing against any of this. At Match Points an overtrick can be the difference between an above average board or an average board. At IMPs an overtrick gains 1 IMP. However a missed game or slam substantially increases the lost IMPs.

Board 19 Round 4_21 from the recent 2011 Bermuda Bowl I kibitzed the players from my home country, South Africa, landing in inferior contracts (or having to defend after failing to enter the auction). Here is an example
{comments}

In the open room either a bidding error or a partnership misunderstanding led to an inferior contract. In the closed room the South player chose not to open the bidding. Nobody knows how the auction would have continued in the closed room if South had opened the bidding. However in the open room East could have saved the board by bidding 5♠ over 5♥. Had E/W bid the excellent ♠ slam instead of the ♣ slam the 13 IMPS lost on the deal would in fact have been a 13 IMP gain. An inferior contract resulted in a double IMP swing.

The Bermuda Bowl showcases the top players from their respective countries. Yet even at this level the gap between the teams who made the quarter finals and the rest quickly opened up. The hand above is an example of how the gap opened so quickly. Landing in the right contract is the first step to progressing further in the tournament.

These forums have plenty of ATB threads (assign the blame) and How Do You Bid This threads. They all have to do with bidding. Berkowitz and Manley didn’t do their survey in the BBO Forums. Most likely they surveyed USA’s top players.

Conclusion: Maybe Berkowitz and Manley’s survey wasn’t wrong after all.
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#67 User is offline   bluecalm 

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Posted 2011-December-09, 20:29

Quote

Conclusion: Maybe Berkowitz and Manley’s survey wasn’t wrong after all.


There is a difference between what part of swings is due to bidding and what part of edge is due to it.
Surely bidding is a cause of most swings but they are very often random (comes from system, close calls etc.)
I remember I did calculations how elite pairs perform vs par on defense, declarer play and bidding.
My conclusion was that cardplay (anything after 1st lead) contributes more to skill difference than bidding ( comparison vs par obviously isn't the essence of bridge but still it says something).
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#68 User is offline   Mbodell 

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Posted 2011-December-10, 17:09

View Post32519, on 2011-December-09, 05:47, said:

There is a quicker (easier) way to draw your conclusions. Below is an extract from David Berkowitz and Brent Manley’s book “Precision Today”.

In a survey of the nation’s top bridge players a few years ago, the experts were asked what they consider the most important aspect of bridge play. Just about everyone said they think bidding is approximately 80% of the game. No matter how well you play, your results will be bad if you do not reach reasonable contracts.

You can limit the tourney to a bidding tourney: Multi versus other methods. It will need to take place as an Open Room / Closed Room tourney. That way it is easy to compare the final contract reached in both rooms. If the final contract is the same, obviously no gain has been made using Multi versus other methods. Where the final contract differs the four players at each table can simply agree if the contract is makeable or not (without actually playing each hand). After the opening lead is made declarer can claim exposing all four hands. Now everybody can see all the cards. The players can simply agree amongst themselves if the final contract is makeable or not. This way you completely eliminate both declarer's ability to play the hand as well as the defensive ability of the opponents. Keep a hand written summary next to you containing those hands where a different final contract was reached and whether it was makeable or not. Record which method was used to reach the final contract.

Easy!


This also doesn't work because there is more to the bidding then just arriving at the right contract from the right side. There's also how much information the defense has. A fun experiment might be to see how well expert players defend versus normal bidding to a contract compared to the same board (different experts) where the declaring side just opened with the final contract, leaking no other information. 1nt-2nt-3nt is much easier to defend against then a 3nt opening that could have been 1nt-3nt or 1c-1d-2nt-3nt or 1h-1s-2d-3c-3nt or many other auctions.
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#69 User is offline   Free 

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Posted 2011-December-11, 05:50

View Post32519, on 2011-December-09, 17:28, said:

The threads you are referring to are:
Bidding is 80% of bridge http://www.bridgebas...is-80-of-bridge
What’s the best way to improve your play? http://www.bridgebas...rove-your-play/
Developing Bidding Judgement http://www.bridgebas...ding-judgement/

I am not arguing against any of this. At Match Points an overtrick can be the difference between an above average board or an average board. At IMPs an overtrick gains 1 IMP. However a missed game or slam substantially increases the lost IMPs.

Board 19 Round 4_21 from the recent 2011 Bermuda Bowl I kibitzed the players from my home country, South Africa, landing in inferior contracts (or having to defend after failing to enter the auction). Here is an example
{comments}

In the open room either a bidding error or a partnership misunderstanding led to an inferior contract. In the closed room the South player chose not to open the bidding. Nobody knows how the auction would have continued in the closed room if South had opened the bidding. However in the open room East could have saved the board by bidding 5♠ over 5♥. Had E/W bid the excellent ♠ slam instead of the ♣ slam the 13 IMPS lost on the deal would in fact have been a 13 IMP gain. An inferior contract resulted in a double IMP swing.

The Bermuda Bowl showcases the top players from their respective countries. Yet even at this level the gap between the teams who made the quarter finals and the rest quickly opened up. The hand above is an example of how the gap opened so quickly. Landing in the right contract is the first step to progressing further in the tournament.

These forums have plenty of ATB threads (assign the blame) and How Do You Bid This threads. They all have to do with bidding. Berkowitz and Manley didn’t do their survey in the BBO Forums. Most likely they surveyed USA’s top players.

Conclusion: Maybe Berkowitz and Manley’s survey wasn’t wrong after all.

You can't draw any conclusion from what you bring as "evidence". Berkowitz and Manley did a survey a couple of years before 2002 (but they didn't specify how many years - is it 2 or 20 years ago?) and their conclusion at that time apparently was that bidding is more important. But times change, bridge theory changes,... These days people/top players think declarer play and defense are much more important than bidding.

- on the forums we also have several top players, from different countries. Although we aren't all top players, I read the reactions from truly world class experts, and they all said declarer play is most important.

- Overtricks gain a lot in MP scoring, that's true. But when you're playing a sharp contract, you're not playing for overtricks, you're playing for contract or defeat. This particular 1 trick is then worth 5, 10, or even more imps (depending on the contract and vulnerability), while in MP it's only the difference between an average and a top/bottom.

- You can bring lots of examples where bidding created a huge swing, but you can do the same with declarer play or defensive play. In the latest BB final we got a great example, Simon De Wijs found the perfect defense in trick 1:

He played the Q, the other table did not. He never made his A, but got his partner twice on lead to play . Result: a vulnerable game swing.

- It's much easier to create an ATB thread or a bidding poll, because your options are very limited. If you give 2 hands and ask how people will play, usually they'll respond "I'll start with blablabla, what happens?". You'll have an endless thread going back and forth. OP can give 20 spoilers, but then how objective will the responses be? If one looks at all the spoilers first, he can almost recreate 4 hands and play DD.
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#70 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2012-May-02, 00:38

Multi is the other one I have been keeping an eye open for. I haven’t seen many in the USBC who play it although there certainly have been enough opportunities. Woolsey / Stewart were one of the pairs playing Multi but they seem to have been knocked out. Most of the other guys are opening the 6-card major directly. No Multi means no Muiderberg either.
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#71 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2012-May-02, 05:18

It shouldn't be a surprise that only few ACBL pairs play multi.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

- hrothgar
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#72 User is offline   WellSpyder 

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Posted 2012-May-02, 10:12

View Post32519, on 2012-May-02, 00:38, said:

Multi is the other one I have been keeping an eye open for. I haven’t seen many in the USBC who play it although there certainly have been enough opportunities.

That's a bit odd, isn't it? How does it fit with your "theory" that the hands are rigged to test the conventions US players use rather than the ones they don't use?
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Posted 2012-May-02, 18:37

View Postgwnn, on 2011-December-09, 05:58, said:

That is interesting because just about everyone on BBF said they think cardplay is by far more important than bidding.

Cardplay is important of course, but if you're at the level where everyone will usually find the correct plays, then bidding becomes more important.
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#74 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2012-June-29, 22:32

Here is another article on the Multi that I stumbled across. I found it on the English Bridge Union website. Tom Townsend and Heather Dhondy debate whether or not the Multi is a good convention. Others may be interested in what was said in the document.
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#75 User is offline   mikestar13 

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Posted 2012-June-30, 00:37

Let's look at a hypothetical scenario: the ACBL makes the multi GCC legal, but doesn't change the rest of the GCC. (This will never happen in the real world, but pretend it did.)
Would the multi be worth playing in a GCC event if no interesting uses for 2M are legal? By the way, I know the GCC is idiotic, but the vast majority of ACBL players are stuck with it whether they wish to be or not. I'd love to hear opinions on this scenario and I'm not totally sure which I think is best. Call it thread hijacking if you wish.
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#76 User is offline   Mbodell 

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Posted 2012-June-30, 01:16

View Postmikestar13, on 2012-June-30, 00:37, said:

Let's look at a hypothetical scenario: the ACBL makes the multi GCC legal, but doesn't change the rest of the GCC. (This will never happen in the real world, but pretend it did.)
Would the multi be worth playing in a GCC event if no interesting uses for 2M are legal? By the way, I know the GCC is idiotic, but the vast majority of ACBL players are stuck with it whether they wish to be or not. I'd love to hear opinions on this scenario and I'm not totally sure which I think is best. Call it thread hijacking if you wish.


I don't fully understand why, but I think a fair number of people play multi and natural weak 2, but just have narrower ranges. Like 2M is a good 7-11 while multi is 4 - bad 7 or what not (or the reverse or direct 2 is the "good" range but direct 2 is the "bad" range and multi covers the other range or the reverse). So I think some would think it still has value.
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#77 User is offline   Cthulhu D 

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Posted 2012-June-30, 04:24

View Postmikestar13, on 2012-June-30, 00:37, said:

Let's look at a hypothetical scenario: the ACBL makes the multi GCC legal, but doesn't change the rest of the GCC. (This will never happen in the real world, but pretend it did.)
Would the multi be worth playing in a GCC event if no interesting uses for 2M are legal? By the way, I know the GCC is idiotic, but the vast majority of ACBL players are stuck with it whether they wish to be or not. I'd love to hear opinions on this scenario and I'm not totally sure which I think is best. Call it thread hijacking if you wish.


Plenty of stuff to consider. As Mdodell comments even just a trash mini multi + solid weak 2s (or visa versa) has something to recommend it because you can better judge preempt extension. Alternatively, 2S intermediate, 2H flannery and 2D multi?
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Posted 2012-June-30, 07:47

View Postmikestar13, on 2012-June-30, 00:37, said:

Let's look at a hypothetical scenario: the ACBL makes the multi GCC legal, but doesn't change the rest of the GCC. (This will never happen in the real world, but pretend it did.)
Would the multi be worth playing in a GCC event if no interesting uses for 2M are legal? By the way, I know the GCC is idiotic, but the vast majority of ACBL players are stuck with it whether they wish to be or not. I'd love to hear opinions on this scenario and I'm not totally sure which I think is best. Call it thread hijacking if you wish.

I would put myself in the "stuck with it" group, but I think the "vast majority" of ACBL players don't have a clue even that there are allowable conventions beyond those with which they're familiar. As I mentioned in another thread, recently I asked the Tournament Chair for our upcoming Regional about Mid-Chart conventions, and I had to explain to her what the Mid-Chart is! And she is a relatively experienced tournament player. :blink: :ph34r:
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#79 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2012-June-30, 23:48

View Post32519, on 2012-June-29, 22:32, said:

Here is another article on the Multi that I stumbled across. I found it on the English Bridge Union website. Tom Townsend and Heather Dhondy debate whether or not the Multi is a good convention. Others may be interested in what was said in the document.


Dhondy gives several good arguments against playing multi, but then gives such bad examples that make you want to play multi after all.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

- hrothgar
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Posted 2012-November-25, 02:41

I see more and more players playing a "Destructive Only" Multi i.e. holding 4-7 HCP and as little as KJxxxx in either major. Their weak 2 and 2 now become constructive, promising 8-11 HCP and a decent suit.

Why would you want to waste the 2 bid for "Destructive Only" purposes? You've told the opponents you have crap (both in suit and HCP). When they declare the hand and your suit is known, your partner is going to be finessed for EVERY missing HCP outside your suit. So to repeat the question: What do you gain from using a "Destructive Only" Multi?
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